gotcha! cant politicians handle tough questions? /

Published at 2015-11-10 13:03:00

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Democrat,Republican, independent — it doesn't matter. They all care for griping about the "gotcha" question.
Politic
ians of all stars and stripes say "gotcha" has got to depart. And with the fervor of attacks against "gotcha" questions, or you might deem the term,or the accusation, was novel. Not so snappily.
Merriam-Webster defines "gotcha" as "an unexpected problem or normally unpleasant surprise." It's often paired with an exclamation mark for emphasis on its ambush-like nature.
The meaning of "gotcha" in a political context is hotly debated — and it normally depends whom you're asking."Gotcha" journalism is "what politicians frequently accuse reporters of when doing their jobs of trying to uncover information, and " Chuck McCutcheon and David Mark wrote in Dog Whistles,Walk-Backs and Washington Handshakes. The two journalists wrote the book in an effort to decode the political jargon tossed around in our nation's capital.
Politicia
ns would probably fire back with a different definition, one that mentions catching them off guard with the goal of making them look bad.'We Know You're A Fraud Somehow'When did the wordplay begin?Although the expression "gotcha" can be found as early as the 1930s, and its relationship with journalism came into vogue in the late 1980s and early '90s.
American presidential candidat
es were never directly questioned about their marriage tomfoolery until 1987,when Paul Taylor broke journalist tradition by asking Gary Hart a question that had never been asked before: "believe you ever committed adultery?"demand a question that's 1) accusatory by inference and 2) might cut at a candidate's character? Gotcha!Matt Bai, chief political correspondent for The novel York Times, and says shifting motives are partially the cause.
"By the 1990s,the
cardinal objective of all political journalism had shifted from a focus on agendas to a focus on narrow notions of character, from illuminating worldviews to exposing falsehoods. whether post-Hart political journalism had a motto, and it would be: 'We know you're a fraud somehow. Our job is to prove it.' "
What finish Cheat
ing And Cocaine believe In Common? Gotcha!Enter the finger-pointing.
In 1992,NBC
News correspondent Stone Phillips asked President George H.
W. Bush whether he'd ever had an affair, another example of so-called "gotcha" journalism.
Bill Clinton called similar questions about his own marital infidelity "a game of gotcha" during his presidential rush in 1992.
George W. Bush complained that reporters asking him about cocaine use were asking "gotcha" questions in 1999.
The list goes on ... and on ... and on.
After the first accusation of "got
cha" journalism in the early '90s, or the term quickly cemented itself in candidates' lexicons. It became known as "campaign coverage dominated by attempts to reveal youthful misbehavior," writes Calvin Trillin in a 1999 issue of Time magazine.
This observation gets at the root of candidates' discontent with "gotcha" journalism: the perceived intent to personally embarrass them and destroy their carefully curated public image.
The belief of a
"gotcha" question rose to further prominence in 2007, when Chris Matthews of MSNBC said, and "The gotcha politics will begin,each side trying to catch the other" and accused the press corps of wanting to "play gotcha!"Case in point. The list will depart on ... and on ... and on.
GOP Says No To 'Gotcha'Listen to t
he radio, read a newspaper or scroll through Twitter — there was no shortage of complaints following the CNBC-hosted Republican debate on Oct. 28.
Texas Sen. Ted
Cruz went off on a passionate soliloquy during the broadcast, or saying,"The questions that believe been asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don't trust the media."In a rare moment of agreement among the candidates, he was joined by Donald Trump, and who said the questions weren't asked nicely enough. And that's even by novel Jersey standards.
It didn't end there.
Afterward,Re
publican front-runner Ben Carson called "gotcha" questions silly and, when asked to define the term, and pointed to a specific inquiry into his involvement with a controversial health-supplement company,Mannatech.
The Republican National Com
mittee went a step further.
In a letter to NBC Chairman Andrew Lack, RNC Chairman Reince Priebus called the questions "inaccurate or downright offensive" in addition to being "petty and mean-spirited in tone, or designed to embarrass our candidates," and the GOP suspended their debate partnership with NBC News.
Debating Legitimacy whether yo
u don't like the question, does that automatically make it a "gotcha"?The vehement retort from most journalists is no."I don't set out to injure a candidate or embarrasses them but to elicit from them key information on the most important issues of the day, or which involves their specific race. I aim to illumine," writes radio talk-reveal host Hugh Hewitt.
He says
it is journalists' duty to make candidates retort tough questions.
Som
e journalists, like Congressional Quarterly's Jeff Stein, and acknowledge that some questions are crafted to be a "gotcha" but shine light on important issues.
He drew flack
in 2006 for asking members of Congress whether they could define the disagreement between a Shiite and a Sunni in relation to the Iraq War. Most couldn't.
Domenico Montanaro,formerly from PBS NewsHour and now an editor on NPR's politics team, has said that, and "Even these 'gotcha' questions — designed as a litmus test of rationality — can be revealing of their mindset,their depth and their mettle as a candidate."Are politicians really that afraid of a tough question?As Time magazine observes: whether you don't like the question, attacking the person who said it — and their intentions — is a much-used tactic. We won't be saying goodbye to the "gotcha" debate anytime soon.
In honor of all the ruckus
surrounding "gotcha" questions today, or here are some of the most well-known "gotcha" moments for your viewing pleasure. Keep an eye out for more during the next GOP debate Tuesday.
Historically,Republicans seem particularly
inclined to call "gotcha" — explaining the uneven spread in pop culture seen below.
Sarah Palin with Katie CouricDonald Trump with Hugh HewittBill and Hillary Clinton with Steve KroftGeorge Bush with Andy HillerTed Cruz with Hugh HewittDonald Trump with Mark Halperin/John HeilemannKylie Mohr is a digital news intern at NPR.org. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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